The Iliad of Homer


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What drives thee, Nestor, from the field of fame?  
Shall then proud Hector see his boast fulfill'd,  
Our fleets in ashes, and our heroes kill'd?  
Such was his threat, ah! now too soon made good,  
On many a Grecian bosom writ in blood.  
Is every heart inflamed with equal rage  
Against your king, nor will one chief engage?  
And have I lived to see with mournful eyes  
In every Greek a new Achilles rise?"  
Gerenian Nestor then: "So fate has will'd;  
And all-confirming time has fate fulfill'd.  
Not he that thunders from the aerial bower,  
Not Jove himself, upon the past has power.  
The wall, our late inviolable bound,  
And best defence, lies smoking on the ground:  
Even to the ships their conquering arms extend,  
And groans of slaughter'd Greeks to heaven ascend.  
On speedy measures then employ your thought  
In such distress! if counsel profit aught:  
Arms cannot much: though Mars our souls incite,  
These gaping wounds withhold us from the fight."  
To him the monarch: "That our army bends,  
That Troy triumphant our high fleet ascends,  
And that the rampart, late our surest trust  
517  


Page
515 516 517 518 519

Quick Jump
1 245 490 735 980